For most Oregon parking lots, a stencil applied with traffic paint is the right marking choice for one reason: it produces a code-compliant ADA, MUTCD, or fire-lane marking at the lowest first-year cost. Pre-formed thermoplastic decals last three to five times longer but cost three to five times more upfront, and direct-paint freehand striping is rarely worth the labor savings for spec-driven markings. The decision hinges on how often the lot will be restriped and whether the marking faces an inspector.
This guide compares stencil-and-paint, freehand paint, thermoplastic spray-applied, and pre-formed thermoplastic decals across cost, durability, application speed, and code fit.
What's the difference between a stencil, paint, and a decal?
The four marking methods that matter for parking lots:
- Stencil plus paint -- a reusable LDPE or aluminum mask laid on the pavement, then traffic paint is sprayed across the cut openings. The stencil controls letter height and shape; the paint is the actual marking material.
- Freehand paint -- traffic paint applied without a mask, typically with a striping cart for stall lines or by hand for arrows and curbs. No stencil; the operator's hand controls the geometry.
- Spray-applied thermoplastic -- molten thermoplastic compound (90 to 125 dry mils thick per FHWA MUTCD §3A.05) sprayed through a stencil. Same masking workflow but a different paint chemistry that bonds to the asphalt.
- Pre-formed thermoplastic decal -- a heat-applied factory-cut tape with the symbol or word already on it. The crew torches it onto clean pavement; no stencil and no paint mixing.
The first three all require some form of stencil for non-line markings (symbols, words, arrows). The decal eliminates the stencil entirely.
Quick-answer table
| Method | First-year cost (per ADA symbol) | Service life | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stencil plus traffic paint | $75 to $150 | 12 to 18 months | Routine restripe cycles, budget-driven properties |
| Stencil plus thermoplastic | $185 to $385 | 3 to 5 years | Mid-cycle properties wanting fewer restripes |
| Pre-formed thermoplastic decal | $215 to $475 | 4 to 7 years | Inspector-facing markings, low restripe budget |
| Freehand paint | $40 to $90 (lines only) | 12 to 18 months | Stall lines, curb stripes; not for symbols |
When does a stencil-and-paint job win?
Stencil plus traffic paint wins when the property runs a routine 12 to 24-month restripe cycle anyway. The service life of the marking matches the cycle, the upfront cost is lowest, and the stencil is a reusable asset that amortizes across multiple visits.
For a Portland Metro retail center Cojo restriped in March 2026, the property manager runs a 12-month seal-and-stripe contract because the lot sees heavy retail traffic and the seal coat is on the same cycle. Spending 4x more on thermoplastic decals would have wasted the durability premium -- the next seal coat would have buried the decal anyway. The right call was reusable LDPE stencils with high-build water-based traffic paint, applied at 16 to 25 wet mils per Federal Specification TT-P-1952.
When does a thermoplastic decal win?
Pre-formed thermoplastic wins when the marking faces an inspector or a high-stakes audit and the property cannot afford a faded marking between restripe cycles. Three scenarios:
- ADA wheelchair symbols at hospitals, government, and schools -- where an inspector can show up unannounced
- Fire-lane "FIRE LANE NO PARKING" pavement words -- where a faded marking can void enforceability under NFPA 1 §18.2.3.5
- High-traffic drive-thrus and loading dock approaches -- where paint wear from heavy turning loads accelerates fade
Thermoplastic decals also retain their reflective glass beads better than spray-applied paint, which matters at night.
When does spray-applied thermoplastic win?
Spray-applied thermoplastic is the middle ground. It uses a stencil like the paint workflow, but the chemistry bonds to the asphalt at 400 degrees F and cures into a thick (90 to 125 dry mil) durable mark. Best for:
- Mid-volume property managers who restripe every 3 to 5 years
- Cold-weather climates where freeze-thaw shortens water-based paint life
- Lots with airport-grade pavement marking specs
The catch is mobilization. Thermoplastic requires a heated kettle and 230-volt power, which raises the per-visit cost and shrinks the contractor pool. For lots smaller than 50,000 square feet, the mobilization premium often offsets the durability gain.
What about freehand paint?
Freehand paint is the workflow for stall lines, curb striping, and chevrons -- markings where geometry is controlled by a striping cart guide wheel or a chalked layout, not a stencil. It is the wrong tool for symbols, words, or arrows because letter height and symbol fidelity drift sharply when the operator works freehand. ADA wheelchair symbols painted freehand routinely fail ADA Std 703.7.2.1 inspections.
Pair freehand stall-line painting with stenciled symbols and words on the same crew visit -- that combination is the standard professional restripe.
Industry Baseline Range
| Marking | Stencil + paint | Stencil + thermoplastic | Pre-formed decal |
|---|---|---|---|
| ADA wheelchair symbol (per stall) | $75 to $150 | $185 to $385 | $215 to $475 |
| Directional arrow | $25 to $65 | $85 to $185 | $115 to $235 |
| "FIRE LANE" word marking (per 50 ft. of curb) | $185 to $385 | $475 to $895 | $585 to $1,150 |
| Stall numbering 1-50 | $4 to $9 each | $14 to $28 each | $18 to $36 each |
Current Market Reality
Pre-formed thermoplastic prices spiked 18 to 25 percent in 2025 because the supply chain for the glass-bead reflective beads tightened. Spray-applied thermoplastic is up 10 to 15 percent in the same window. Stencil-and-paint pricing is up only 6 to 10 percent because the water-based traffic paint supply has been steadier. The math now favors stencil-and-paint more than it did two years ago for properties with restripe cycles under 24 months.
How do I choose?
Start with the restripe cycle the property already runs:
| Restripe cycle | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| Annual or semiannual seal-and-stripe contract | Stencil + traffic paint |
| 24 to 36 months | Stencil + traffic paint or stencil + spray thermoplastic |
| 36 to 60 months | Stencil + spray thermoplastic |
| 5 plus years between restripes | Pre-formed thermoplastic decal |
Get a stencil-paint-decal quote for your Oregon property
Cojo runs all four workflows from a single mobilization, which is the rarest setup in the Oregon market. We can mix stencil-and-paint for stall lines and arrows with pre-formed thermoplastic for ADA symbols and fire-lane words, all on one crew visit. Get a custom quote for a mixed-material restripe, or start with the parking lot stencils buyer's guide for the product-by-product breakdown.